<h2><SPAN name="Bulls" id="Bulls" /><i>Bulls</i></h2>
<p>If the tramp were suddenly to pass away from the United States, widespread
misery for many families would follow. The tramp enables thousands of men
to earn honest livings, educate their children, and bring them up
God-fearing and industrious. I know. At one time my father was a constable
and hunted tramps for a living. The community paid him so much per head
for all the tramps he could catch, and also, I believe, he got mileage
fees. Ways and means was always a pressing problem in our household, and
the amount of meat on the table, the new pair of shoes, the day's outing,
or the text-book for school, were dependent upon my father's luck in the
chase. Well I remember the suppressed eagerness and the suspense with
which I waited to learn each morning what the results of his past night's
toil had been—how many tramps he had gathered in and what the chances
were for convicting them. And so it was, when later, as a tramp, I
succeeded in eluding some predatory constable, I could not but feel sorry
for the little boys and girls at home in that constable's house; it seemed
to me in a way that I was defrauding those little boys and girls of some
of the good things of life.</p>
<p>But it's all in the game. The hobo defies society, and society's
watch-dogs make a living out of him. Some hoboes like to be caught by the
watch-dogs—especially in winter-time. Of course, such hoboes select
communities where the jails are "good," wherein no work is performed and
the food is substantial. Also, there have been, and most probably still
are, constables who divide their fees with the hoboes they arrest. Such a
constable does not have to hunt. He whistles, and the game comes right up
to his hand. It is surprising, the money that is made out of stone-broke
tramps. All through the South—at least when I was hoboing—are convict
camps and plantations, where the time of convicted hoboes is bought by the
farmers, and where the hoboes simply have to work. Then there are places
like the quarries at Rutland, Vermont, where the hobo is exploited, the
unearned energy in his body, which he has accumulated by "battering on
the drag" or "slamming gates," being extracted for the benefit of that
particular community.</p>
<p>Now I don't know anything about the quarries at Rutland, Vermont. I'm very
glad that I don't, when I remember how near I was to getting into them.
Tramps pass the word along, and I first heard of those quarries when I was
in Indiana. But when I got into New England, I heard of them continually,
and always with danger-signals flying. "They want men in the quarries,"
the passing hoboes said; "and they never give a 'stiff' less than ninety
days." By the time I got into New Hampshire I was pretty well keyed up
over those quarries, and I fought shy of railroad cops, "bulls," and
constables as I never had before.</p>
<p>One evening I went down to the railroad yards at Concord and found a
freight train made up and ready to start. I located an empty box-car, slid
open the side-door, and climbed in. It was my hope to win across to White
River by morning; that would bring me into Vermont and not more than a
thousand miles from Rutland. But after that, as I worked north, the
distance between me and the point of danger would begin to increase. In
the car I found a "gay-cat," who displayed unusual trepidation at my
entrance. He took me for a "shack" (brakeman), and when he learned I was
only a stiff, he began talking about the quarries at Rutland as the cause
of the fright I had given him. He was a young country fellow, and had
beaten his way only over local stretches of road.</p>
<p>The freight got under way, and we lay down in one end of the box-car and
went to sleep. Two or three hours afterward, at a stop, I was awakened by
the noise of the right-hand door being softly slid open. The gay-cat slept
on. I made no movement, though I veiled my eyes with my lashes to a little
slit through which I could see out. A lantern was thrust in through the
doorway, followed by the head of a shack. He discovered us, and looked at
us for a moment. I was prepared for a violent expression on his part, or
the customary "Hit the grit, you son of a toad!" Instead of this he
cautiously withdrew the lantern and very, very softly slid the door to.
This struck me as eminently unusual and suspicious. I listened, and softly
I heard the hasp drop into place. The door was latched on the outside. We
could not open it from the inside. One way of sudden exit from that car
was blocked. It would never do. I waited a few seconds, then crept to the
left-hand door and tried it. It was not yet latched. I opened it, dropped
to the ground, and closed it behind me. Then I passed across the bumpers
to the other side of the train. I opened the door the shack had latched,
climbed in, and closed it behind me. Both exits were available again. The
gay-cat was still asleep.</p>
<p>The train got under way. It came to the next stop. I heard footsteps in
the gravel. Then the left-hand door was thrown open noisily. The gay-cat
awoke, I made believe to awake; and we sat up and stared at the shack and
his lantern. He didn't waste any time getting down to business.</p>
<p>"I want three dollars," he said.</p>
<p>We got on our feet and came nearer to him to confer. We expressed an
absolute and devoted willingness to give him three dollars, but explained
our wretched luck that compelled our desire to remain unsatisfied. The
shack was incredulous. He dickered with us. He would compromise for two
dollars. We regretted our condition of poverty. He said uncomplimentary
things, called us sons of toads, and damned us from hell to breakfast.
Then he threatened. He explained that if we didn't dig up, he'd lock us in
and carry us on to White River and turn us over to the authorities. He
also explained all about the quarries at Rutland.</p>
<p>Now that shack thought he had us dead to rights. Was not he guarding the
one door, and had he not himself latched the opposite door but a few
minutes before? When he began talking about quarries, the frightened
gay-cat started to sidle across to the other door. The shack laughed loud
and long. "Don't be in a hurry," he said; "I locked that door on the
outside at the last stop." So implicitly did he believe the door to be
locked that his words carried conviction. The gay-cat believed and was in
despair.</p>
<p>The shack delivered his ultimatum. Either we should dig up two dollars, or
he would lock us in and turn us over to the constable at White River—and
that meant ninety days and the quarries. Now, gentle reader, just suppose
that the other door had been locked. Behold the precariousness of human
life. For lack of a dollar, I'd have gone to the quarries and served three
months as a convict slave. So would the gay-cat. Count me out, for I was
hopeless; but consider the gay-cat. He might have come out, after those
ninety days, pledged to a life of crime. And later he might have broken
your skull, even your skull, with a blackjack in an endeavor to take
possession of the money on your person—and if not your skull, then some
other poor and unoffending creature's skull.</p>
<p>But the door was unlocked, and I alone knew it. The gay-cat and I begged
for mercy. I joined in the pleading and wailing out of sheer cussedness, I
suppose. But I did my best. I told a "story" that would have melted the
heart of any mug; but it didn't melt the heart of that sordid
money-grasper of a shack. When he became convinced that we didn't have any
money, he slid the door shut and latched it, then lingered a moment on the
chance that we had fooled him and that we would now offer him the two
dollars.</p>
<p>Then it was that I let out a few links. I called him a son of a toad. I
called him all the other things he had called me. And then I called him a
few additional things. I came from the West, where men knew how to swear,
and I wasn't going to let any mangy shack on a measly New England "jerk"
put it over me in vividness and vigor of language. At first the shack
tried to laugh it down. Then he made the mistake of attempting to reply. I
let out a few more links, and I cut him to the raw and therein rubbed
winged and flaming epithets. Nor was my fine frenzy all whim and literary;
I was indignant at this vile creature, who, in default of a dollar, would
consign me to three months of slavery. Furthermore, I had a sneaking idea
that he got a "drag" out of the constable fees.</p>
<p>But I fixed him. I lacerated his feelings and pride several dollars'
worth. He tried to scare me by threatening to come in after me and kick
the stuffing out of me. In return, I promised to kick him in the face
while he was climbing in. The advantage of position was with me, and he
saw it. So he kept the door shut and called for help from the rest of the
train-crew. I could hear them answering and crunching through the gravel
to him. And all the time the other door was unlatched, and they didn't
know it; and in the meantime the gay-cat was ready to die with fear.</p>
<p>Oh, I was a hero—with my line of retreat straight behind me. I slanged
the shack and his mates till they threw the door open and I could see
their infuriated faces in the shine of the lanterns. It was all very
simple to them. They had us cornered in the car, and they were going to
come in and man-handle us. They started. I didn't kick anybody in the
face. I jerked the opposite door open, and the gay-cat and I went out. The
train-crew took after us.</p>
<p>We went over—if I remember correctly—a stone fence. But I have no doubts
of recollection about where we found ourselves. In the darkness I promptly
fell over a grave-stone. The gay-cat sprawled over another. And then we
got the chase of our lives through that graveyard. The ghosts must have
thought we were going some. So did the train-crew, for when we emerged
from the graveyard and plunged across a road into a dark wood, the shacks
gave up the pursuit and went back to their train. A little later that
night the gay-cat and I found ourselves at the well of a farmhouse. We
were after a drink of water, but we noticed a small rope that ran down one
side of the well. We hauled it up and found on the end of it a gallon-can
of cream. And that is as near as I got to the quarries of Rutland,
Vermont.</p>
<p>When hoboes pass the word along, concerning a town, that "the bulls is
horstile," avoid that town, or, if you must, go through softly. There are
some towns that one must always go through softly. Such a town was
Cheyenne, on the Union Pacific. It had a national reputation for being
"horstile,"—and it was all due to the efforts of one Jeff Carr (if I
remember his name aright). Jeff Carr could size up the "front" of a hobo
on the instant. He never entered into discussion. In the one moment he
sized up the hobo, and in the next he struck out with both fists, a club,
or anything else he had handy. After he had man-handled the hobo, he
started him out of town with a promise of worse if he ever saw him again.
Jeff Carr knew the game. North, south, east, and west to the uttermost
confines of the United States (Canada and Mexico included), the
man-handled hoboes carried the word that Cheyenne was "horstile."
Fortunately, I never encountered Jeff Carr. I passed through Cheyenne in a
blizzard. There were eighty-four hoboes with me at the time. The strength
of numbers made us pretty nonchalant on most things, but not on Jeff
Carr. The connotation of "Jeff Carr" stunned our imagination, numbed our
virility, and the whole gang was mortally scared of meeting him.</p>
<p>It rarely pays to stop and enter into explanations with bulls when they
look "horstile." A swift get-away is the thing to do. It took me some time
to learn this; but the finishing touch was put upon me by a bull in New
York City. Ever since that time it has been an automatic process with me
to make a run for it when I see a bull reaching for me. This automatic
process has become a mainspring of conduct in me, wound up and ready for
instant release. I shall never get over it. Should I be eighty years old,
hobbling along the street on crutches, and should a policeman suddenly
reach out for me, I know I'd drop the crutches and run like a deer.</p>
<p>The finishing touch to my education in bulls was received on a hot summer
afternoon in New York City. It was during a week of scorching weather. I
had got into the habit of throwing my feet in the morning, and of spending
the afternoon in the little park that is hard by Newspaper Row and the
City Hall. It was near there that I could buy from pushcart men current
books (that had been injured in the making or binding) for a few cents
each. Then, right in the park itself, were little booths where one could
buy glorious, ice-cold, sterilized milk and buttermilk at a penny a glass.
Every afternoon I sat on a bench and read, and went on a milk debauch. I
got away with from five to ten glasses each afternoon. It was dreadfully
hot weather.</p>
<p>So here I was, a meek and studious milk-drinking hobo, and behold what I
got for it. One afternoon I arrived at the park, a fresh book-purchase
under my arm and a tremendous buttermilk thirst under my shirt. In the
middle of the street, in front of the City Hall, I noticed, as I came
along heading for the buttermilk booth, that a crowd had formed. It was
right where I was crossing the street, so I stopped to see the cause of
the collection of curious men. At first I could see nothing. Then, from
the sounds I heard and from a glimpse I caught, I knew that it was a bunch
of gamins playing pee-wee. Now pee-wee is not permitted in the streets of
New York. I didn't know that, but I learned pretty lively. I had paused
possibly thirty seconds, in which time I had learned the cause of the
crowd, when I heard a gamin yell "Bull!" The gamins knew their business.
They ran. I didn't.</p>
<p>The crowd broke up immediately and started for the sidewalk on both sides
of the street. I started for the sidewalk on the park-side. There must
have been fifty men, who had been in the original crowd, who were heading
in the same direction. We were loosely strung out. I noticed the bull, a
strapping policeman in a gray suit. He was coming along the middle of the
street, without haste, merely sauntering. I noticed casually that he
changed his course, and was heading obliquely for the same sidewalk that I
was heading for directly. He sauntered along, threading the strung-out
crowd, and I noticed that his course and mine would cross each other. I
was so innocent of wrong-doing that, in spite of my education in bulls and
their ways, I apprehended nothing. I never dreamed that bull was after me.
Out of my respect for the law I was actually all ready to pause the next
moment and let him cross in front of me. The pause came all right, but it
was not of my volition; also it was a backward pause. Without warning,
that bull had suddenly launched out at me on the chest with both hands. At
the same moment, verbally, he cast the bar sinister on my genealogy.</p>
<p>All my free American blood boiled. All my liberty-loving ancestors
clamored in me. "What do you mean?" I demanded. You see, I wanted an
explanation. And I got it. Bang! His club came down on top of my head, and
I was reeling backward like a drunken man, the curious faces of the
onlookers billowing up and down like the waves of the sea, my precious
book falling from under my arm into the dirt, the bull advancing with the
club ready for another blow. And in that dizzy moment I had a vision. I
saw that club descending many times upon my head; I saw myself, bloody and
battered and hard-looking, in a police-court; I heard a charge of
disorderly conduct, profane language, resisting an officer, and a few
other things, read by a clerk; and I saw myself across in Blackwell's
Island. Oh, I knew the game. I lost all interest in explanations. I didn't
stop to pick up my precious, unread book. I turned and ran. I was pretty
sick, but I ran. And run I shall, to my dying day, whenever a bull begins
to explain with a club.</p>
<p>Why, years after my tramping days, when I was a student in the University
of California, one night I went to the circus. After the show and the
concert I lingered on to watch the working of the transportation machinery
of a great circus. The circus was leaving that night. By a bonfire I came
upon a bunch of small boys. There were about twenty of them, and as they
talked with one another I learned that they were going to run away with
the circus. Now the circus-men didn't want to be bothered with this mess
of urchins, and a telephone to police headquarters had "coppered" the
play. A squad of ten policemen had been despatched to the scene to arrest
the small boys for violating the nine o'clock curfew ordinance. The
policemen surrounded the bonfire, and crept up close to it in the
darkness. At the signal, they made a rush, each policeman grabbing at the
youngsters as he would grab into a basket of squirming eels.</p>
<p>Now I didn't know anything about the coming of the police; and when I saw
the sudden eruption of brass-buttoned, helmeted bulls, each of them
reaching with both hands, all the forces and stability of my being were
overthrown. Remained only the automatic process to run. And I ran. I
didn't know I was running. I didn't know anything. It was, as I have said,
automatic. There was no reason for me to run. I was not a hobo. I was a
citizen of that community. It was my home town. I was guilty of no
wrong-doing. I was a college man. I had even got my name in the papers,
and I wore good clothes that had never been slept in. And yet I
ran—blindly, madly, like a startled deer, for over a block. And when I
came to myself, I noted that I was still running. It required a positive
effort of will to stop those legs of mine.</p>
<p>No, I'll never get over it. I can't help it. When a bull reaches, I run.
Besides, I have an unhappy faculty for getting into jail. I have been in
jail more times since I was a hobo than when I was one. I start out on a
Sunday morning with a young lady on a bicycle ride. Before we can get
outside the city limits we are arrested for passing a pedestrian on the
sidewalk. I resolve to be more careful. The next time I am on a bicycle
it is night-time and my acetylene-gas-lamp is misbehaving. I cherish the
sickly flame carefully, because of the ordinance. I am in a hurry, but I
ride at a snail's pace so as not to jar out the flickering flame. I reach
the city limits; I am beyond the jurisdiction of the ordinance; and I
proceed to scorch to make up for lost time. And half a mile farther on I
am "pinched" by a bull, and the next morning I forfeit my bail in the
police court. The city had treacherously extended its limits into a mile
of the country, and I didn't know, that was all. I remember my inalienable
right of free speech and peaceable assemblage, and I get up on a soap-box
to trot out the particular economic bees that buzz in my bonnet, and a
bull takes me off that box and leads me to the city prison, and after that
I get out on bail. It's no use. In Korea I used to be arrested about every
other day. It was the same thing in Manchuria. The last time I was in
Japan I broke into jail under the pretext of being a Russian spy. It
wasn't my pretext, but it got me into jail just the same. There is no hope
for me. I am fated to do the Prisoner-of-Chillon stunt yet. This is
prophecy.</p>
<p>I once hypnotized a bull on Boston Common. It was past midnight and he had
me dead to rights; but before I got done with him he had ponied up a
silver quarter and given me the address of an all-night restaurant. Then
there was a bull in Bristol, New Jersey, who caught me and let me go, and
heaven knows he had provocation enough to put me in jail. I hit him the
hardest I'll wager he was ever hit in his life. It happened this way.
About midnight I nailed a freight out of Philadelphia. The shacks ditched
me. She was pulling out slowly through the maze of tracks and switches of
the freight-yards. I nailed her again, and again I was ditched. You see, I
had to nail her "outside," for she was a through freight with every door
locked and sealed.</p>
<p>The second time I was ditched the shack gave me a lecture. He told me I
was risking my life, that it was a fast freight and that she went some. I
told him I was used to going some myself, but it was no go. He said he
wouldn't permit me to commit suicide, and I hit the grit. But I nailed her
a third time, getting in between on the bumpers. They were the most meagre
bumpers I had ever seen—I do not refer to the real bumpers, the iron
bumpers that are connected by the coupling-link and that pound and grind
on each other; what I refer to are the beams, like huge cleats, that cross
the ends of freight cars just above the bumpers. When one rides the
bumpers, he stands on these cleats, one foot on each, the bumpers between
his feet and just beneath.</p>
<p>But the beams or cleats I found myself on were not the broad, generous
ones that at that time were usually on box-cars. On the contrary, they
were very narrow—not more than an inch and a half in breadth. I couldn't
get half of the width of my sole on them. Then there was nothing to which
to hold with my hands. True, there were the ends of the two box-cars; but
those ends were flat, perpendicular surfaces. There were no grips. I could
only press the flats of my palms against the car-ends for support. But
that would have been all right if the cleats for my feet had been decently
wide.</p>
<p>As the freight got out of Philadelphia she began to hit up speed. Then I
understood what the shack had meant by suicide. The freight went faster
and faster. She was a through freight, and there was nothing to stop her.
On that section of the Pennsylvania four tracks run side by side, and my
east-bound freight didn't need to worry about passing west-bound freights,
nor about being overtaken by east-bound expresses. She had the track to
herself, and she used it. I was in a precarious situation. I stood with
the mere edges of my feet on the narrow projections, the palms of my hands
pressing desperately against the flat, perpendicular ends of each car. And
those cars moved, and moved individually, up and down and back and forth.
Did you ever see a circus rider, standing on two running horses, with one
foot on the back of each horse? Well, that was what I was doing, with
several differences. The circus rider had the reins to hold on to, while I
had nothing; he stood on the broad soles of his feet, while I stood on the
edges of mine; he bent his legs and body, gaining the strength of the arch
in his posture and achieving the stability of a low centre of gravity,
while I was compelled to stand upright and keep my legs straight; he rode
face forward, while I was riding sidewise; and also, if he fell off, he'd
get only a roll in the sawdust, while I'd have been ground to pieces
beneath the wheels.</p>
<p>And that freight was certainly going some, roaring and shrieking,
swinging madly around curves, thundering over trestles, one car-end
bumping up when the other was jarring down, or jerking to the right at the
same moment the other was lurching to the left, and with me all the while
praying and hoping for the train to stop. But she didn't stop. She didn't
have to. For the first, last, and only time on The Road, I got all I
wanted. I abandoned the bumpers and managed to get out on a side-ladder;
it was ticklish work, for I had never encountered car-ends that were so
parsimonious of hand-holds and foot-holds as those car-ends were.</p>
<p>I heard the engine whistling, and I felt the speed easing down. I knew the
train wasn't going to stop, but my mind was made up to chance it if she
slowed down sufficiently. The right of way at this point took a curve,
crossed a bridge over a canal, and cut through the town of Bristol. This
combination compelled slow speed. I clung on to the side-ladder and
waited. I didn't know it was the town of Bristol we were approaching. I
did not know what necessitated slackening in speed. All I knew was that I
wanted to get off. I strained my eyes in the darkness for a
street-crossing on which to land. I was pretty well down the train, and
before my car was in the town the engine was past the station and I could
feel her making speed again.</p>
<p>Then came the street. It was too dark to see how wide it was or what was
on the other side. I knew I needed all of that street if I was to remain
on my feet after I struck. I dropped off on the near side. It sounds easy.
By "dropped off" I mean just this: I first of all, on the side-ladder,
thrust my body forward as far as I could in the direction the train was
going—this to give as much space as possible in which to gain backward
momentum when I swung off. Then I swung, swung out and backward, backward
with all my might, and let go—at the same time throwing myself backward
as if I intended to strike the ground on the back of my head. The whole
effort was to overcome as much as possible the primary forward momentum
the train had imparted to my body. When my feet hit the grit, my body was
lying backward on the air at an angle of forty-five degrees. I had reduced
the forward momentum some, for when my feet struck, I did not immediately
pitch forward on my face. Instead, my body rose to the perpendicular and
began to incline forward. In point of fact, my body proper still retained
much momentum, while my feet, through contact with the earth, had lost all
their momentum. This momentum the feet had lost I had to supply anew by
lifting them as rapidly as I could and running them forward in order to
keep them under my forward-moving body. The result was that my feet beat a
rapid and explosive tattoo clear across the street. I didn't dare stop
them. If I had, I'd have pitched forward. It was up to me to keep on
going.</p>
<p>I was an involuntary projectile, worrying about what was on the other side
of the street and hoping that it wouldn't be a stone wall or a telegraph
pole. And just then I hit something. Horrors! I saw it just the instant
before the disaster—of all things, a bull, standing there in the
darkness. We went down together, rolling over and over; and the automatic
process was such in that miserable creature that in the moment of impact
he reached out and clutched me and never let go. We were both knocked out,
and he held on to a very lamb-like hobo while he recovered.</p>
<p>If that bull had any imagination, he must have thought me a traveller from
other worlds, the man from Mars just arriving; for in the darkness he
hadn't seen me swing from the train. In fact, his first words were: "Where
did you come from?" His next words, and before I had time to answer, were:
"I've a good mind to run you in." This latter, I am convinced, was
likewise automatic. He was a really good bull at heart, for after I had
told him a "story" and helped brush off his clothes, he gave me until the
next freight to get out of town. I stipulated two things: first, that the
freight be east-bound, and second, that it should not be a through freight
with all doors sealed and locked. To this he agreed, and thus, by the
terms of the Treaty of Bristol, I escaped being pinched.</p>
<p>I remember another night, in that part of the country, when I just missed
another bull. If I had hit him, I'd have telescoped him, for I was coming
down from above, all holds free, with several other bulls one jump behind
and reaching for me. This is how it happened. I had been lodging in a
livery stable in Washington. I had a box-stall and unnumbered
horse-blankets all to myself. In return for such sumptuous accommodation I
took care of a string of horses each morning. I might have been there yet,
if it hadn't been for the bulls.</p>
<p>One evening, about nine o'clock, I returned to the stable to go to bed,
and found a crap game in full blast. It had been a market day, and all the
negroes had money. It would be well to explain the lay of the land. The
livery stable faced on two streets. I entered the front, passed through
the office, and came to the alley between two rows of stalls that ran the
length of the building and opened out on the other street. Midway along
this alley, beneath a gas-jet and between the rows of horses, were about
forty negroes. I joined them as an onlooker. I was broke and couldn't
play. A coon was making passes and not dragging down. He was riding his
luck, and with each pass the total stake doubled. All kinds of money lay
on the floor. It was fascinating. With each pass, the chances increased
tremendously against the coon making another pass. The excitement was
intense. And just then there came a thundering smash on the big doors that
opened on the back street.</p>
<p>A few of the negroes bolted in the opposite direction. I paused from my
flight a moment to grab at the all kinds of money on the floor. This
wasn't theft: it was merely custom. Every man who hadn't run was grabbing.
The doors crashed open and swung in, and through them surged a squad of
bulls. We surged the other way. It was dark in the office, and the narrow
door would not permit all of us to pass out to the street at the same
time. Things became congested. A coon took a dive through the window,
taking the sash along with him and followed by other coons. At our rear,
the bulls were nailing prisoners. A big coon and myself made a dash at the
door at the same time. He was bigger than I, and he pivoted me and got
through first. The next instant a club swatted him on the head and he went
down like a steer. Another squad of bulls was waiting outside for us. They
knew they couldn't stop the rush with their hands, and so they were
swinging their clubs. I stumbled over the fallen coon who had pivoted me,
ducked a swat from a club, dived between a bull's legs, and was free. And
then how I ran! There was a lean mulatto just in front of me, and I took
his pace. He knew the town better than I did, and I knew that in the way
he ran lay safety. But he, on the other hand, took me for a pursuing bull.
He never looked around. He just ran. My wind was good, and I hung on to
his pace and nearly killed him. In the end he stumbled weakly, went down
on his knees, and surrendered to me. And when he discovered I wasn't a
bull, all that saved me was that he didn't have any wind left in him.</p>
<p>That was why I left Washington—not on account of the mulatto, but on
account of the bulls. I went down to the depot and caught the first blind
out on a Pennsylvania Railroad express. After the train got good and under
way and I noted the speed she was making, a misgiving smote me. This was a
four-track railroad, and the engines took water on the fly. Hoboes had
long since warned me never to ride the first blind on trains where the
engines took water on the fly. And now let me explain. Between the tracks
are shallow metal troughs. As the engine, at full speed, passes above, a
sort of chute drops down into the trough. The result is that all the water
in the trough rushes up the chute and fills the tender.</p>
<p>Somewhere along between Washington and Baltimore, as I sat on the platform
of the blind, a fine spray began to fill the air. It did no harm. Ah, ha,
thought I; it's all a bluff, this taking water on the fly being bad for
the bo on the first blind. What does this little spray amount to? Then I
began to marvel at the device. This was railroading! Talk about your
primitive Western railroading—and just then the tender filled up, and it
hadn't reached the end of the trough. A tidal wave of water poured over
the back of the tender and down upon me. I was soaked to the skin, as wet
as if I had fallen overboard.</p>
<p>The train pulled into Baltimore. As is the custom in the great Eastern
cities, the railroad ran beneath the level of the streets on the bottom of
a big "cut." As the train pulled into the lighted depot, I made myself as
small as possible on the blind. But a railroad bull saw me, and gave
chase. Two more joined him. I was past the depot, and I ran straight on
down the track. I was in a sort of trap. On each side of me rose the steep
walls of the cut, and if I ever essayed them and failed, I knew that I'd
slide back into the clutches of the bulls. I ran on and on, studying the
walls of the cut for a favorable place to climb up. At last I saw such a
place. It came just after I had passed under a bridge that carried a level
street across the cut. Up the steep slope I went, clawing hand and foot.
The three railroad bulls were clawing up right after me.</p>
<p>At the top, I found myself in a vacant lot. On one side was a low wall
that separated it from the street. There was no time for minute
investigation. They were at my heels. I headed for the wall and vaulted
it. And right there was where I got the surprise of my life. One is used
to thinking that one side of a wall is just as high as the other side. But
that wall was different. You see, the vacant lot was much higher than the
level of the street. On my side the wall was low, but on the other
side—well, as I came soaring over the top, all holds free, it seemed to
me that I was falling feet-first, plump into an abyss. There beneath me,
on the sidewalk, under the light of a street-lamp was a bull. I guess it
was nine or ten feet down to the sidewalk; but in the shock of surprise in
mid-air it seemed twice that distance.</p>
<p>I straightened out in the air and came down. At first I thought I was
going to land on the bull. My clothes did brush him as my feet struck the
sidewalk with explosive impact. It was a wonder he didn't drop dead, for
he hadn't heard me coming. It was the man-from-Mars stunt over again. The
bull did jump. He shied away from me like a horse from an auto; and then
he reached for me. I didn't stop to explain. I left that to my pursuers,
who were dropping over the wall rather gingerly. But I got a chase all
right. I ran up one street and down another, dodged around corners, and at
last got away.</p>
<p>After spending some of the coin I'd got from the crap game and killing off
an hour of time, I came back to the railroad cut, just outside the lights
of the depot, and waited for a train. My blood had cooled down, and I
shivered miserably, what of my wet clothes. At last a train pulled into
the station. I lay low in the darkness, and successfully boarded her when
she pulled out, taking good care this time to make the second blind. No
more water on the fly in mine. The train ran forty miles to the first
stop. I got off in a lighted depot that was strangely familiar. I was back
in Washington. In some way, during the excitement of the get-away in
Baltimore, running through strange streets, dodging and turning and
retracing, I had got turned around. I had taken the train out the wrong
way. I had lost a night's sleep, I had been soaked to the skin, I had been
chased for my life; and for all my pains I was back where I had started.
Oh, no, life on The Road is not all beer and skittles. But I didn't go
back to the livery stable. I had done some pretty successful grabbing, and
I didn't want to reckon up with the coons. So I caught the next train out,
and ate my breakfast in Baltimore.</p>
<p> </p>
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